1,682 research outputs found
Uncertainties in Atmospheric Neutrino Fluxes
An evaluation of the principal uncertainties in the computation of neutrino
fluxes produced in cosmic ray showers in the atmosphere is presented. The
neutrino flux predictions are needed for comparison with experiment to perform
neutrino oscillation studies. The paper concentrates on the main limitations
which are due to hadron production uncertainties. It also treats primary cosmic
ray flux uncertainties, which are at a lower level. The absolute neutrino
fluxes are found to have errors of around 15% in the neutrino energy region
important for contained events underground. Large cancellations of these errors
occur when ratios of fluxes are considered, in particular, the
ratio below GeV, the
ratio below GeV and
the up/down ratios above GeV are at the 1% level. A detailed
breakdown of the origin of these errors and cancellations is presented.Comment: 14 pages, 22 postscript figures, written in Revte
Neutrino astronomy and the atmospheric background
Some aspects of neutrino astronomy are illustrated by calculating the neutrino-induced muon flux from Cygnus X-3 binary X-ray source. The signal depends primarily on the power in cosmic rays at the source and on the distance to the source, and only relatively little on details of the matter distribution in the neighborhood of the source
Atmospheric neutrinos observed in underground detectors
Atmospheric neutrinos are produced when the primary cosmic ray beam hits the atmosphere and initiates atmospheric cascades. Secondary mesons decay and give rise to neutrinos. The neutrino production was calculated and compared with the neutrino fluxes detected in underground detectors. Contained neutrino events are characterized by observation of an interaction within the fiducial volume of the detector when the incoming particle is not observed. Both the neutrino flux and the containment requirement restrict the energy of the neutrinos observed in contained interactions to less than several GeV. Neutrinos interact with the rock surrounding the detector but only muon neutrino interactions can be observed, as the electron energy is dissipated too fast in the rock. The direction of the neutrino is preserved in the interaction and at energies above 1 TeV the angular resolution is restricted by the scattering of the muon in the rock. The muon rate reflects the neutrino spectrum above some threshold energy, determined by the detector efficiency for muons
Cosmic ray albedo gamma rays from the quiet sun
We estimate the flux of gamma-rays that result from collisions of high energy galactic cosmic rays with the solar atmosphere. An important aspect of our model is the propagation of cosmic rays through the magnetic fields of the inner solar systems. We use diffusion to model propagation down to the bottom of the corona. Below the corona we trace particle orbits through the photospheric fields to determine the location of cosmic ray interactions in the solar atmosphere and evolve the resultant cascades. For our nominal choice of parameters, we predict an integrated flux of gamma rays (at 1 AU) of F(E(sub gamma) greater than 100 MeV) approximately = 5 x 10(exp -8)/sq cm sec. This can be an order of magnitude above the galactic background and should be observable by the Energetic Gamma Ray experiment telescope (EGRET)
QCD-motivated description of very high energy particle interactions
Cross sections for the production of secondaries with large transverse momentum can become comparable to the total cross section in the TeV energy range. It is argued that the onset of this effect is observed at sub TeV energies via an increase of the rapidity distribution near y = 0, an increase of p sub T with energy and, most directly, via a correlation between p sub T and multiplicity. If indeed scaling violations are associated with the hard scattering of partons, then scaling violations are largely confined to the central region and have little effect on cosmic ray data which are sensitive to the forward fragmentation region
Heavy-neutrino decays at neutrino telescopes
It has been recently proposed that a sterile neutrino \nu_h of mass
m_h=40--80 MeV, mixing |U_{\mu h}|^2=10^{-3}--10^{-2}, lifetime \tau_h \lsim
10^{-9} s, and a dominant decay mode (\nu_h \to \nu_\mu \gamma) could be the
origin of the experimental anomalies observed at LSND, KARMEN and MiniBooNE.
Such a particle would be abundant inside air showers, as it can be produced in
kaon decays (K -> \nu_h \mu, K_L -> \nu_h \pi \mu). We use the Z-moment method
to evaluate its atmospheric flux and the frequency of its decays inside
neutrino telescopes. We show that the \nu_h would imply around 10^4 contained
showers per year inside a 0.03 km^3 telescope like ANTARES or the DeepCore in
IceCube. These events would have a characteristic energy and zenith-angle
distribution (E_\nu = 0.1--10 TeV and \theta < 90^o), which results from a
balance between the reach of the heavy neutrino (that disfavors low energies)
and a sizeable production rate and decay probability. The standard background
from contained neutrino events (\nu_e N \to e X and neutral-current
interactions of high inelasticity) is 100 times smaller. Therefore, although it
may be challenging from an experimental point of view, a search at ANTARES and
IceCube could confirm this heavy-neutrino possibility.Comment: 10 pages. Comments on constraints from muon capture and cosmology
added, minor corrections, references added. Version to appear as a Rapid
Communication in PR
Hadron cross sections at ultra high energies and unitarity bounds on diffraction dissociation
It was shown that if unitarity bounds on diffractive cross sections are valid at ultra high energies then diffractive dominance models which ascribe the increase in total hadron-hadron cross sections to diffractive processes only are ruled out. Calculations also show that cosmic ray cross sections derived from air shower experiments at ultra high energies clearly rule out models for hadron-hadron cross sections with nat.log ns energy dependence and favor those with nat.log n(2)s variation
High energy neutrino absorption and its effects on stars in close X-ray binaries
The physics and astrophysics of high energy neutrino production and interactions in close X-ray binary systems are studied. These studies were stimulated by recent observations of ultrahigh energy gamma-rays and possibly other ultrahigh energy particles coming from the directions of Cygnus X-3 and other binary systems and possessing the periodicity characteristics of these systems. Systems in which a compact object, such as a neutron star, is a strong source of high energy particles which, in turn, produce photons, neutronos and other secondary particles by interactions in the atmosphere of the companion star were considered. The highest energy neutrinos are absorbed deep in the companion and the associated energy deposition may be large enough to effect its structure or lead to its ultimate disruption. This neutrino heating was evaluated, starting with a detailed numerical calculation of the hadronic cascade induced in the atmosphere of the companion star. For some theoretical models, the resulting energy deposition from neutrino absorption may be so great as to disrupt the companion star over an astronomically small timescale of the order of 10,000 years. Even if the energy deposition is smaller, it may still be high enough to alter the system substantially, perhaps leading to quenching of high energy signals from the source. Given the cosmic ray luminosities required to produce the observed gamma rays from cygnus X-3 and LMX X-4, such a situation may occur in these sources
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